The world's first bobsleigh club was founded in
St. Moritz,
Switzerland, in 1897. By 1904, competitions were taking place on natural ice courses (
Olympia Bobrun St. Moritz-Celerina). This growth led to the creation of the FIBT in 1923 with inclusion into the
International Olympic Committee (IOC) the following year. Before the IBSF, the organization was originally known by the
French name (FIBT). At the
1924 Winter Olympics in
Chamonix, the four-man event took place. In 1930, the first
FIBT World Championships took place with the four-man event in
Caux-sur-Montreux, Switzerland with the first two-man event taking place in
Oberhof, Germany, the following year. At the
1932 Winter Olympics in
Lake Placid, the two-man competition debuted. In 1935, the
Internationaler Schlittensportsverband, a forerunner to the
International Luge Federation, was absorbed into the FIBT and a "Section de Luge" was created. The luge section would be abolished when the FIL was split off in 1957. Because of the growing weight issue at the
1952 Winter Olympics, the first changes occurred when weight limits were introduced. Since then, configurations to the tracks and the bobsleigh itself would be regulated for both competition and safety reasons. Also, bobsleigh was not included in the
1960 Winter Olympics in
Squaw Valley, California, for cost reasons in track construction. The development of artificially
refrigerated tracks in the late 1960s and early 1970s would greatly enhance speeds. World Cup competitions were first developed in the 1980s while women's competitions took place in the early 1990s. The 2-woman bobsleigh event had their first World Championships in
Winterberg, Germany, in 2000 and debuted at the
2002 Winter Olympics in
Salt Lake City. In 2016 the IBSF introduced mono-bob as another discipline for youth competitions and as a women's event at the adult level. ==History of Skeleton==